Converting Your PhotoShop Files Again – This Time into HTML5
HTML5 is here. For the year 2012, the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) and the Web Hypertext Application Technology Working Group (WHATWG) are scheduled to present a completed draft of HTML5, but as of December last year, the draft was yet to be finished. HTML5 aims to create a standard for web pages, so that all browsers can support it, and second, so that the Internet experience for the average user becomes richer. Of course, along the way, several changes to HTML encoding will happen, but HTML5 is still in the works, but this year, a lot is going to change.
Many developers are already complaining of having to relearn an old way of encoding just to support the new additions HTML5 will bring to the average Internet user. However, a cursory look at the new coding shows that the changes are really simplifications of the old way of coding HTML, plus new additions to what can be presented on a web page, such as video.
Still, it is back to ground zero – either relearn the new way of HTML5 coding, or resort to a PSD to HTML5 service, if you have previously designed your blog from a PhotoShop file. You can look at it as an opportunity to finally get around to learning the code that makes your blod work, and you are on equal footing with the professionals, or hire a PSD to HTML5 service as usual and wait for a simpler HTML to happen, which won’t be until several years after 2022.
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